The word comes from the Latin word mittere meaning to send
First attest 1775, ultimately from Greek ballein "to throw". Of rockets or missiles, from 1949. Ballistic missile first attested 1954, attained extreme heights, hence figurative expression 'go ballistic' (1981) "become irrationally angry."
I believe you mean the "Jericho" missile. That would be Tony Stark.
The Romans created the first ballista. It looked like a very large cross bow. It throws things a long way (relatively). A ballistic missile throws itself. An anti-ballistic missile throws itself at the incoming ballistic missile.
Germany invented the guided missile.A list of guided missiles invented by German engineers and scientists:Henschel Hs 293 (Anti-ship guided missile)Fritz X (Anti-ship guided missile)Messerschmitt "Enzian" E-4 (Radio controlled guided missile)Rheintochter (Surface to air missile)Wasserfall (Surface to air missile)
The arrow is rather an old fashioned missile nowadays.
No, the word 'missile' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an object that is forcibly propelled at a target, a word for a thing.
The ball became a missile aimed right at my neighbor's window.
Man i only have one missile left in my aircraft.
Custardpie
The word comes from the Latin word mittere meaning to send
MIRV
Words that describe nouns are adjectives; the word missile is a noun. Some adjectives that can describe a missile are:awesome (awe inspiring)fastsleekswiftfleetspeedyballisticsupersonic
· missile · mortar
Beware the missile's trajectory.
1. When a mechanic dropped a wrench in a missile silo in Arkansa, a missile was launched, 2. Kim Jung Eun ordered his general to fire the missile from the silo, but the missile was made by starving prisoners and so it fell apart immediately.
You may say 'misairu,' written: ミサイル